The Post-SEPA Payments Landscape
The European payments processing landscape is changing rapidly. Which organisations will emerge as winners as the industry converges in the context of SEPA? Collin Consulting Ltd carried out an informal survey to find out.
Payments Convergence
Driven mainly by the move towards a Single Euro Payments Area (SEPA), the European payments processing landscape is changing rapidly. Three types of convergence are underway:
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Geographical Convergence. Payments processing across different european countries is harmonising and cross-border payments are becoming more similar to domestic payments. As a result, smaller domestic processors are being replaced by larger pan-European processors which are able to leverage economies of scale. This is true of both card payments, with the increasing dominance of large international processors such as First Data, and non-card payments, with small domestic Automated Clearing Houses (ACHs) giving way to larger pan-European ACHs or "PE-ACHs", such as Vocalink.
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Industry Convergence. The processing of card payments (debit and credit cards) is converging with the processing of non-card, ACH payments (direct debits and direct credits). This is reflected in the emergence of organisations which process both card and non-card transactions, for example Equens, which was formed from the merger of a Belgian card processor, Banksys, with a German ACH, TKI.
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Value Chain Convergence. The distinctions between players at different stages of the payments value chain are beginning to blur. In particular, there is an increasing tendency for smaller organisations to outsource processing activities to larger, more efficient players upstream in the value chain. This is true of smaller banks outsourcing to larger banks, banks outsourcing to payments processors, and processors outsourcing to IT companies, as illustrated below.
Convergence Scenarios
The table below illustrates various convergence scenarios:
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The orange arrows illustrate the ongoing consolidation of domestic processors into pan-European processors, already referred to.
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The blue arrows illustrate the emergence of PE-ACHs such as Equens and Vocalink, which have aspirations to process both card and non-card payments on a pan-European basis.
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The red arrows illustrate the possible movement of the international card companies, and other large card processors such as First Data, all of which already operate on a pan-European basis, into non-card, ACH processing.
Possible Winners
Which organisations will emerge as winners in the post-SEPA payments landscape? To find out, Collin Consulting Ltd carried out an informal survey of the opinions of a small number of payments industry experts, in effect asking them to vote for key players in four categories: banks; card processors; non-card processors, and IT companies. And the payments landscape which emerged looked like this:
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